Project Chanology: How a Tom Cruise Video Sparked a Digital Revolution
In January 2008, something changed on the internet. Anonymous went from trolls on 4chan to a global political force. The catalyst? A leaked Tom Cruise video and the Church of Scientology’s attempt to scrub it from the web.
This conflict birthed modern hacktivism. It made the Guy Fawkes mask a symbol of resistance worldwide.
The Spark: A Leaked Tape and a DMCA Takedown
The Church of Scientology had a problem. A 2004 internal video featuring Tom Cruise leaked online in January 2008. In the nine-minute clip, Cruise talks with intense energy about being a Scientologist. He claims Scientologists are the only people who have the tools to “really help” at a car accident. He calls psychiatry a “pseudo-science.”
The video hit YouTube. The Church moved fast to suppress it. They issued copyright violations (DMCA) to force its removal. Major platforms complied. Gawker refused. The tech news site stated the video was newsworthy.
For users on 4chan and 711chan, this crossed a line. The Church wasn’t protecting copyright. They were censoring the internet. The collective’s view of the Church’s legal tactics as a threat to free speech pushed them to act.
“We Are Legion”: The Declaration of War
On January 21, 2008, a video appeared on YouTube. “Message to Scientology” used a robotic text-to-speech voice over floating clouds. The message was clear:
“Hello, Scientology. We are Anonymous. Your campaigns of misinformation, suppression of dissent, your legal tactics, all of these things have caught our eye. We shall proceed to expel you from the Internet and systematically dismantle the Church of Scientology in its present form.”
The video ended with a motto: “We are Anonymous. We are Legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us.”
Phase 1: Digital Chaos and “Black Faxes”
Anonymous launched their first offensive. The tactics were crude, illegal, and chaotic:
DDoS Attacks: Anonymous users flooded Scientology websites with traffic. The sites crashed repeatedly.
Black Faxes: Members sent thousands of all-black pages to Church fax machines. This depleted toner cartridges and jammed phone lines.
Prank Calls: Church centers worldwide received waves of prank calls. Their ability to communicate collapsed.
Google Bombing: Anonymous manipulated algorithms. Searching for “Scientology” returned “Dangerous Cult” as a top result.
Phase 2: The Mask and the Streets
The digital attacks caused disruption. They also risked landing participants in prison. Mark Bunker, a longtime Scientology critic, posted a video. Anonymous called him “Wise Beard Man.” He urged the collective to shift toward legal, peaceful protest. He warned the illegal hacking played into the Church’s persecution narrative.
Anonymous listened. On February 10, 2008, the movement went offline.
About 7,000 people gathered in over 100 cities worldwide. London, Los Angeles, and dozens of other cities saw protesters outside Church of Scientology centers. Protesters wore masks to protect their identities. The Church had a notorious “Fair Game” policy. Critics faced harassment from private investigators.
The protesters chose the Guy Fawkes mask from the film V for Vendetta. The result was striking. A uniform visual of protesters in suits and masks. They held signs reading “Honk if you think Scientology is a cult.” They blasted Rick Astley’s “Never Gonna Give You Up” from boomboxes.
The Legacy
Project Chanology didn’t destroy the Church of Scientology. But the damage to its public image was lasting. The effect on cyber-activism was permanent.
Birth of the Hacktivist: Anonymous proved an internet subculture could organize real-world political action. The collective evolved from pranksters into a decentralized force. They later targeted authoritarian regimes during the Arab Spring.
The Symbol of Protest: The Guy Fawkes mask became a global face of resistance. Occupy Wall Street adopted it. Protests in Hong Kong, Turkey, and Brazil used it.
Piercing the Veil: Anonymous mocked the Church openly and survived. This stripped away the fear of litigation. Previous critics had been silenced. This paved the way for later exposés like HBO’s Going Clear.
For the first time, the internet stood up, walked into the street, and fought back.


